Tornadoes Eric A. Pani The University of Louisiana at Monroe.

12
Tornadoes Eric A. Pani The University of Louisiana at Monroe

Transcript of Tornadoes Eric A. Pani The University of Louisiana at Monroe.

Page 1: Tornadoes Eric A. Pani The University of Louisiana at Monroe.

Tornadoes

Eric A. PaniThe University of Louisiana at Monroe

Page 2: Tornadoes Eric A. Pani The University of Louisiana at Monroe.

Background

Definition: a violently rotating column of air that extends to the ground from a cumuliform cloud

Visible funnel may not be present every time

Funnel cloud if rotation does not reach ground

Most rotate cyclonically Statistics:

Average width ~ 100 m Average path length ~ 1-2

miles Average forward speed ~ 10-

20 mph Most have wind speeds < 100

mph

(Source: http://www.motorminute.com/Mixed_Nutz/Tornado.gif)

(Source:http://www.zonezero.com/exposiciones/road/images/eleventh/tornado.jpg

Page 3: Tornadoes Eric A. Pani The University of Louisiana at Monroe.

Life cycle

Dust-whirl stage: first sign as dust swirling upward from surface and short funnel from cloud base

Organizing stage: downward descent of funnel and increased intensed

Mature stage: funnel reaches greatest width and nearly vertical

Shrinking stage: decreasing funnel width, increasing tilt as base lags

Decay stage: vortex stretches into rope

May not go trough all stages (Source: http://wings.avkids.com/Book/Atmosphere/Images/tornado.gif)

(Source: http://www.redriver.net/tornado/tornado.jpg)

(Source: http://tornado.sfsu.edu/geosciences/StormChasing/cases/Miami/MiamiWallcloud.GIF)

Page 4: Tornadoes Eric A. Pani The University of Louisiana at Monroe.

Circulation and VorticityCirculation is line integral (counterclockwise) about a contour of velocity component tangent to the contour

V

ldˆ

dlVldVC cosˆ

Page 5: Tornadoes Eric A. Pani The University of Louisiana at Monroe.

Solid Body RotationSuppose a circular disk of radius r is rotating at an angular velocity Ω about the z axis is solid body rotation

r

z

22

0

2

2

0

2

)(

ˆ)(ˆ

and

rdrC

rdrC

ldrldVC

rV

dl

rdθ

rddl

Page 6: Tornadoes Eric A. Pani The University of Louisiana at Monroe.

Problem

For a large tornado, C ~ 5 104 m2s-1

If r ~ 100 m, what is the value of Ω and V?

C = 2πΩr2 and V= Ωr

Ω = C/(2πr2) Ω = (5 104)/(2π(100)2)=0.8 s-1

V = (0.8)(100) = 80 ms-1~160 kts

(Source: http://www.usatoday.com/weather/gallery/tornado/wtor4a.jpg)

Page 7: Tornadoes Eric A. Pani The University of Louisiana at Monroe.

Circulation and Vorticity

22

and 2 disk, For the

Thus,

ˆ

so , But,

ˆ)(ˆ

:Theorem Stokes'By

2

22

r

r

A

CrC

A

C

AdAnC

V

dAnVldVC

A

A

(Source: http://www.nws.noaa.gov/om/all-haz/Double%20Tornado%20Hi.jpg)

Page 8: Tornadoes Eric A. Pani The University of Louisiana at Monroe.

Circulation and Vorticity in Natural Coordinates

n

s

V

nn

VV

)( sd

n

R

V

n

V

sn

C

snR

V

n

VC

RsRs

sns

Vn

VC

nss

Vsnn

VnVsn

n

VC

nsd

snn

VsVsVdsVC

snn

VVsdsVCldVC

sn

0,lim

)( Thus,

1 Now

)(

so )(But

)(

)())((ˆ

Page 9: Tornadoes Eric A. Pani The University of Louisiana at Monroe.

Combined Rankin Vortex

r=a

uniform vorticity

irrotationalenvironment

arr

ara

r

π

CV

π

CK

a

Ka

πa

Car

r

KV

r

rV

rar

rπa

C

πa

CrV

πa

CrrVrdr

πa

CrVd

r

rV

rπa

C

r

V

r

Var

ar

arπa

C

rrV

,1

,

2

2)

2( ,At

)(10 , Outside

22

2)(

)(1 ,Within

, 0

,

2

2

22

2

2

02

0

2

2

V

r

Vmax

a

Page 10: Tornadoes Eric A. Pani The University of Louisiana at Monroe.

Pressure distribution

2

422

2

22

2

3

2

3

2

2

2

2

0

2

02

2

42

22

22

2

1

22But

)2

1(

2)|

2

1(

22

1

2

11

2

1

so ,2

, Outside

2

2let anddensity constant Assume

)2(

1

2

1

2 ,Within

gradient) pressure balances al(centripet 1

balance hiccyclostrop andon distributi pressure chydrostati Assume

0

r

appa

C

r

Cr

Cpp

r

drCdp

r

C

rr

C

r

p

r

CVar

rpprdrdp

a

Cr

a

rC

ra

Cr

r

p

a

CrVar

r

p

r

V

r

p

p r

p

p

r

(Source: http://www.ametsoc.org/AMS/image/challeng/tornado.gif)

Page 11: Tornadoes Eric A. Pani The University of Louisiana at Monroe.

Pressure drop

0max

2max0

max22

0

22

2

422

2

0

So,

2But . Thus,

2

1

2 and

2

,At

ppV

Vpp

VC

aapp

aa

appapp

ar

aa

ar

p0

p∞

2

2max

0

Vp

Page 12: Tornadoes Eric A. Pani The University of Louisiana at Monroe.

Rough estimates

Generally Vmax < 280 kts Let ρ = 1.275 kg m-3

Then p∞ – p0 = ρVmax2=(1.275)(130)2=215 mb

Generally taken to be ~ 100 mb Vertical velocities substantial (~ 80 m/s) and

not necessarily in core Inflow velocities may reach 50 m/s near

ground